Tools

Typography

Share This

The Guardian has reported that the British government should learn from Finland’s policy of providing homes to homeless people.

While homelessness in Finland has fallen by 35% since 2010, in the UK it has increased by more than 100% over a similar time period. This has encouraged The Guardian to get behind the idea of Britain adopting Finland’s simple solution to the problem.

In the business world, Finnish startups raised a record €349 million in investments over the course of 2017. Despite this success being attributed to Finland’s “world-class gaming industry”, Pocket Gamer.biz has reported that Finnish mobile gaming is actually stagnating.

Elsewhere, the gas pipeline that is set to run between Russia and Germany is given Finnish approval, and Finnish football teams have been banned from postponing matches in the event of bad weather.

Finland has found the answer to homelessness. It couldn’t be simplerThe Guardian

“ Homelessness is not a choice made by the individual, it is a reality forced by government policy. As homelessness has rocketed in the UK – up 134% since 2010 – it has fallen by 35% in Finland over a similar period of time. The Finnish government is now aiming to abolish it altogether in the coming years.

I recently travelled to Finland to understand how it had done this. It turns out its solution is painfully simple and blindingly obvious: give homes to homeless people.

Sceptics will argue that giving homes to homeless people is a recipe for disaster. Aren’t we just subsidising addiction? Won’t we end up with huge bills when it all goes wrong? Don’t people need an incentive to get their lives back on track and engage in services?

Actually, no. The evidence from Finland – as well as numerous other pilot schemes across the world – shows the opposite is true. When people are given homes, homelessness is radically reduced, engagement in support services goes up and recovery rates from addiction are comparable to a “treatment first” approach. ”

Original article was published by on 12/04/2018 and can be found here.

Finland’s startup scene racks up another record year with €349 million investedBusiness Insider Nordic

“ Finland’s startup scene keeps powering on. In 2017, Finnish startups and growth companies raised a record €349 million euros in venture capital, up from last year’s €318 million.

There was a particularly high share of bigger rounds, with 8 companies landing more than €10 million in funding.

Reidar Wasenius, who heads FiBAN, a body representing Finnish business angels, says the success is owed to Finland's "world-class gaming industry", its deep-tech capabilities and initiatives such as tech event Slush or startup hub Maria01.

FiBAN partnered up with the Finnish Venture Capital Association (FVCA) for the 2017 funding report.

“The Finnish startup ecosystem can be seen as one of the most active in the Nordics and Europe, and the positive development should only continue in the upcoming years,” Wasenius notes in a joint press release.

Original article was published by on 05/04/2018 and can be found here.

Finland has become an emblem of mobile games industry stagnationPocket Gamer.biz

“ There is no country as tightly bound to the mobile games industry as Finland, where the success of local champions has become a totemic part of national identity.

Yet all that finesse and ingenuity now looks like the formal gardens of Versailles - a symbol of terminal decay as much as sophistication. The very success of multi-billion leviathans like Clash of Clans and Candy Crush ossified the Nordic games industry, leaving it as self-indulgent and risk-averse.

Sweden’s slide into obscurity was obvious years ago as Minecraft failed to respond to the Roblox challenge and King got trapped inside its sterile Candy Crush kingdom.

Finland seemed to remain more relevant - Supercell was still able to deliver a new blockbuster with interesting mechanics in 2016 when Clash Royale debuted.

Yet it’s now easy to see that Clash Royale belonged to the old generation of mobile games. It didn’t demand that consumers rethink the way they play games in the way Pokemon and Fortnite have done. ”

Original article was published by on 16/04/2018 and can be found here.

“ Finland has approved the construction of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline through Finland’s economic zone, the Finnish government and Russian gas exporter Gazprom said on Thursday.

The pipeline between Russia and Germany, which would run for around 375 kilometers across Finland’s economic zone through the Baltic Sea, still requires a construction permit from local Finnish authorities.

The pipeline’s operator Nord Stream 2 AG said it expected the second permit “within the next weeks”.

Nord Stream 2, planned to run from Russia across the bed of the Baltic Sea to Germany, would double the existing Nord Stream pipeline’s current annual capacity of 55 billion cubic meters.

Eastern European and Baltic states fear the pipeline could increase reliance on Russian gas and undermine Ukraine’s role as a gas transit route, but Germany and other beneficiaries in northern Europe back the project. ”

Original article was published by on 05/04/2018 and can be found here.

Clubs in Finland banned from postponing football matchesESPN

“ In what appears ostensibly to be a rather bizarre move, the football authorities in Finland have banned all clubs from postponing matches due to bad weather.

The decision has been made to prevent troublesome fixture pile-ups at the end of the season in what is already a tight schedule, and to cajole clubs into investing in modern all-weather artificial pitches.

According to Matti Apunen, the chairman of the Veikkausliiga (the Finnish top flight), teams who are unable to fulfil their published fixtures will either need to find another suitable venue or "lose their home advantage."

Overall, the banning of postponements seems a little harsh given average winter temperatures regularly dip well below freezing right across Finland, but we're certain there must be some method in the madness. ”

Original article was published by on 05/04/2018 and can be found here.

Partners

Helsinki Times is the very first leading English language publication in Finland established in 2007, covering Finland related news on daily basis. A weekly print edition of Helsinki Times was published from March 2007 up until Feb. 2015.

At the moment Helsinki Times is an online only publication. Readers are mainly expats, diplomats and other international individuals, businesses and groups residing in Finland. Visitors are also tourists, individuals and businesses interested in Finland from all around the world.